Friday, 28 March 2025

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We are poisoning our waterways with waste products from humans and animals 
that, when properly treated, 
could provide valuable biogas and soil conditioner, 
which will help to bring our water bills down.

This is not a sensible way to manage things in 2025

Our water infrastructure needs a full review and rebuild.

Yes, it will cost money, but it will create thousands of good jobs, 
and in the long run we will all be better off, 
not just in terms of money, but also in terms of health and happiness.

We need a full-on national change to renew our water cycle, 
not a half-hearted effort to get water bill payers to patch it up.




















The amazing image below shows all the water on our planet as if it were gathered up instead of spread out in the oceans. The large sphere is salt water. The smaller is fresh water. The tiny sphere is the fresh water that is available to us. This shows how precious our life giving water really is. We should treat it with great respect, not treat it as a convenient garbage can.






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TESTING

 Wessex water show a useful Coast and Rivers Watch  interactive map which identifies which outfalls are discharging untreated sewage into rhinos, streams and rivers. However, it seems that it is impossible to get to their map from outside, by just clicking the link above, so you have to go to https://www.wessexwater.co.uk/ and then search "coast and rivers watch" which should get you there.


Local Action 4 Water are just starting to test water quality with strips that detect nitrates and other indices of pollution. 

The test is simply done. Get a sample of the water in a clean jar, dip a stick in, shake it, wait a specified number of seconds, and compare the colour of each section of the strip with a colour chart. 

We buy our test strips from Simplex Health (don't worry, they are not paying us), and we went for their 5-in-one water test kits, which tests for pH, Total Alkalinity, Total Hardness, Nitrite and Nitrate. They cost £25 for 50 strips (early 2025 prices). Get them here. 

Simplex also sell Phosphate test strips.

If you find raised nitrate and phosphorus levels in your local waterway,  you can call Wessex Water and discuss your results.

Here is a great website on citizen science testing for phosphorus on the River Parrett.

Wednesday, 26 March 2025

THE PRIVATISATION PROBLEM

A study by the University of Greenwich found that about one third of money paid in water bills leaks away from real water services to pay debt interest and dividends to shareholders.  Privatised companies have paid £50 Billion to shareholders, and have created debt of £47 Billion. In short, they have just borrowed money to pay dividends to their shareholders. This is the economics of the neoliberal madhouse.

Privatisation was driven by nothing but Thatcher ideology. Water is not a market; there is no competition, because customers cannot move from one company to another.

Meanwhile, water companies have sold off 35 of their reservoirs and built just two.

Ofwat in December 2024 have allowed water companies (WCs) to raise water bills by about 35% to pay for work involved in separating stormwater from sewage. About 2,500 storm outfalls will need to be upgraded in England and Wales. It is very clear indeed that it is absurd to expect that water and sewage bill payers could or should pay for all the necessary work listed  which is needed to rationalise water management in the UK. Water Bills are designed to pay for the service of supplying clean water and taking away sewage, not rebuilding the infrastructure.


We are talking here about water management, a massive infrastructure operation on a par with President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal in 1933, when he created employment to meet the economic suffering caused by the Great Depression of 1929-39.


The money for reform must be raised by central government to address a crisis of water management that adversely impacts the health of both humans and our aquatic environment, a long crisis that has been created by years of neglect and complacency, to be compounded in coming decades by the effects of climate change. There is a clear need for Keynesian-style investment into this vital element of our national life. 


Neo-liberal economists and politicians (be they Tory, LibDem, or Labour) will use their influence in legacy and social media to scream long and loud in  protest at this suggestion, because to them, money is the only reality worth considering. 


Neo-liberalism is the exceedingly questionable idea that self serving (largely) men, competing against each other for ever-increasing accumulations of monetary wealth, without any external restraint or regulation, will produce the best of all possible worlds. Ecological and human health to neo-liberals is a mere “externality” to their economics. They have no concept of investment in human health or in ecology, they only think of investment in strictly financial terms. They cannot understand that investment can change a “waste” into value, or that healthy rivers, streams and oceans have value also. 


The neoliberal hysteria will be amplified by a campaign by manufacturers of artificial fertilisers against the use of sewage derived soil conditioners, as mentioned above.


This is a battle that we must be prepared to fight and win, because it is the opening battle of an ideological war between neo-liberalism and real, ecological economics of the coming century, an economics which is based on the relation between mankind and the environment that is our life-support system.


The money needed to reform the way water is managed in the UK can be raised by a combination of:

  1. terminating the experiment of privatisation
  2. a tax on the richest layers of British society
  3. a contribution from Quantitative Easing
  4. levies on surfacing materials that prevent rain from being absorbed where it falls



De-privatisation

Responsibility for water was taken from local government in 1974 and put under regional water authorities (RWAs). Investment in water services fell by 2/3rds between 1970 and 1980 because borrowing was forbidden under the Conservatives in power at the time. Margaret Thatcher privatised the RWAs in 1989, and then allowed the private companies to borrow, so investment in infrastructure increased after privatisation. The debt owed by the RWAs was cancelled in order to facilitate privatisation. Debt has increased from zero in 1989 to £60.6 billion by 2022, so that a proportion of water bills (19% in the case of Wessex Water) is diverted to paying interest on the corporations’ debt.


Privatisation means that the WCs must pay dividends annually to their shareholders. In 2022-3 the companies paid out £1.4 billion in dividends to shareholders, nearly 11% of the companies’ total revenues, or 22% of capital investment. 


In other words, without privatisation, about 22% more money could have been applied to preventing sewage spillages into our environment over 35 years.


The public are overwhelmingly against water privatisation. A YouGov poll in 2022 showed that only 8% of people supported privatised water, whereas 63% wanted public ownership. Even of Conservative voters, 58% wanted public ownership, with only 12% supporting the privatised system. Sadly, the Conservative, LibDem and Labour parties lack the courage to start to unpick Thatcher’s toxic legacy, and only the Green Party is calling for de-privatisation of the WCs.


Privatisation need not come at a huge cost. The share value of failing companies can fall away to nothing, so the Government can easily take them over when this happens. Thames Water is near this point in 2024. A water bill strike could bring other companies to that point. The Common Wealth think tank calculates that Government could take over water companies at a cost that is near to zero.


An inventive way of de-privatisation of WCs is by punishing spillages, not by imposing fines, but by acquiring company shares instead. Directors could see power slip out of their hands every time another spillage happens. There is a petition calling for this method here: https://weownit.org.uk/act-now/take-shares-not-fines


Privatised WCs are clearly failing, and re-nationalisation or WCs will signal the beginning of the end of the doctrine of neo-liberalism, which has to be cleared away before we can address the global cluster of major social and environmental problems that we face in our time.


Governments claim that privatisation would cost too much.

But new research  from the University of Greenwich shows taking back English and Welsh water saves a minimum of £3 BILLION a year, no matter the level of shareholder compensation.



A tax on the rich

Households in the bottom decile (tenth) in the United Kingdom earned, on average, £18,706 per year in 2022/23, compared with the top decile which earned £185,358 pounds per year.


The richest 1% of British people hold more wealth than 70% of ordinary British people

Profs Wilkinson and Pickett have shown very clearly that such inequality of income and wealth creates a society that is less healthy, more unhappy, and more dysfunctional than a society that is more equal.


Therefore, the case for raising money from the rich for renovating our water infrastructure is very strong indeed. 


The counter-argument that will be raised is that if we raise taxes in the UK, rich people will move abroad. However, rich people tend to hold assets like land and grand houses in the UK, and these assets cannot be moved. These assets can always be taxed, and money can be raised on them.


Additionally, Britain is a regrettably backwards and conservative country; other countries  are more progressive, so there will be an international movement to tax the rich, leaving the rich with nowhere to go and nothing to do except pay their fair share of taxation.



Quantitative Easing

Most money is created by private banks in the process of granting a loan. When a person is granted a loan by a bank, two accounts are created, an asset in the books of the lender, and a liability in the account of the debtor. The debtor then, in subsequent years,  pays back first the interest and finally the capital amount, at which point the asset and liability accounts cancel each other out, and the bank is left with a profit, which represents new money in the economy. 


The State is allowed by the banks to create cash out of nothing, and may also create money by what is known as Quantitative Easing. 


Viewing the problem of water management in the UK economy, we have the following:

  • A pollution problem that requires a large amount of work
  • Unemployed people who could do this work, preferably using Green Wage Subsidy
  • Available tools and materials to do this work
  • Available skills and knowledge to carry out this work 
  • A beneficial outcome in terms of healthy waters, increased biodiversity, biogas, soil conditioner, an upskilled workforce, and a more equal society


Therefore is is perfectly reasonable to create the money required to carry out this work by Quantitative Easing (QE).


The objection will be raised that QE can lead to hyper-inflation. This is true in some circumstances, where money is just injected into the economy unlinked to any productivity or project by governments in stressful circumstances such as civil war.  



It is therefore clear that the money can and must be raised by central government to pay for renovation of our water management. 




THE PROGRAMME


What are the practical tasks that need to be done? Like most big changes, it needs action at every level: Government, business, and householders.




Action by Government


  1. Keep to Labour’s manifesto promise: Labour will put failing water companies under special measures to clean up our water. We will give regulators new powers to block the payment of bonuses to executives who pollute our waterways and bring criminal charges against persistent law breakers. We will impose automatic and severe fines for wrongdoing and ensure independent monitoring of every outlet.
  2. Government will legislate on separating sewage from surface water in all new developments, with very few exceptions
  3. Government will initiate pilot trials on the processing of industrial waste, reviewing discharges from selected industrial sites, building up ways of neutralising acidic wastes with alkaline wastes, flocculating substances in solution, and so on. This will result in no more mixing of industrial and domestic sewers.
  4. All hard surface installation will have to pay a levy to create conduits to separate surface water from sewage proportionate to the amount of surface water that the hard surfaces will produce
  5. A timetable and plan will be laid out for achieving separation for surface water, sewage and industrial waste.
  6. Review the exact duties of the various bodies with control over water, and provide clear lines of communication and responsibility.



Revenue (i.e.our bills) is £600 million.year
Investment into separating drains is £12 million / year

So that is 2% of revenues. 
Not a lot, considering 50% goes on debt and dividends



Sunday, 23 March 2025

PHOSPHATE POLLUTION

 Phosphate, along with nitrogen and potsassium, is a vital nutrient for plant growth, and is a common ingredient in fertilisers applied to crops.

Phosphate used to be mined from huge mountains of guano - seabird droppings - but this has been used up, and so it is now obtained from phosphate-bearing rock. It is a finite resource, and will run out in 50-100 years, so it is totally unreasonable to poison our waters with a precious, diminishing resource. Phosphate fertilisers should be used carefully,  to supply plants (and animals) with exactly what they need, and not used on a routine basis.

Phpsphorus is also added to drinking water supplies in low doses, (0.5-2mg/litre) to prevent poisonous  lead dissolving into tap water. This is the source of about 5% of the phosphate in sewage. 

If rain washes phosphates into streams, rivers, lakes and the sea, it can cause overgrowths of algae, called eutrophication, in the water, which can kill other life forms by depriving them of sunlight.

Excellent work has been done by citizen scientists on the Somerset Levels on phosphate pollution that is threatening important Ramsay sites, mainly from sewage outfalls. More information here.

Phosphate can be removed from wastewater by reed beds and by chemical reactions. More here. Wessex Water does remove phosphates at some, but not all, of its sewage treatment plants.

The United Nations Environment Programme calls for a 50% reduction in phospate use, and a 50% increase in phosphate retrieval from wastewater.












LINKS TO OTHER SITES


 WESSEX WATER POLLUTION INCIDENTS - useful interactive map of all outfalls that indicates when and where discharges are taking place 


RIVER ACTION - UK wide campaigning for clean water


SURFERS AGAINST SEWAGE - great campaigners against water pollution


TAKE BACK WATER - pledge to withhold our water bills payment


WESSEX WATER WEBSITE 

 

PARRETT AND YEO PHOSPHATE POLLUTION STUDY - Valuable Citizen Science



UPCOMING EVENTS

MEETINGS SCHEDULED FOR DAVID SAWTELL AND DR RICHARD LAWSON 

LEADING A DISCUSSION ON 

WATER POLLUTION IN THE WESSEX REGION


 2025H

29    7PM            WELLS, THE LAWRENCE CENTRE. Doors open 6:30pm

30    7PM            STREET Quaker Meeting House, 36 High Street, BA16 0EB.  Doors open                                                     6.30 



Monday, 17 March 2025

WHAT WE CAN DO AS CAMPAIGNERS



WRITE TO YOUR MP 

1. Ask Labour to stick to its manifesto promise: 

"Labour will put failing water companies under special measures to clean up our water. 
We will give regulators new powers to block the payment of bonuses to executives who pollute our waterways and bring criminal charges against persistent law breakers. 
We will impose automatic and severe fines for wrongdoing and ensure independent monitoring of every outlet".

2. Ask Government to legislate on separating sewage from surface water in all new developments, with very few exceptions.

3. Ask Government to initiate pilot trials on the processing of industrial waste, reviewing discharges from selected industrial sites, building up ways of neutralising acidic wastes with alkaline wastes, flocculating substances in solution, and so on. This will result in no more mixing of industrial and domestic sewers.

4 Ask Government to require that all hard surface installation (i.e. roofs, driveways, roads etc) will have to pay a levy to create conduits to separate surface water from sewage proportionate to the amount of surface water that the hard surfaces will produce.

5. Ask Government to set out a timetable and plan will be laid out for achieving complete separation of surface water, sewage and industrial waste.

6. Ask Government to review the exact duties of the various bodies with control over water, and provide clear lines of communication and responsibility.

7. Support the idea of a "tap tax" on owners of swimming pools.

7.  Ask Government to reverse the privatisation of the water industry because it has failed

8. Buy shares in local Water Companies to enable bill payers’ voices to be heard at WC AGMs

9. Ask Government to set a levy on any hard surface (roofs, roads and car parks, driveways etc) that prevent rainwater from being absorbed into the ground

10. Ask government to charge a Wet Wipe Levy 

11. Ask Government to organise the recovery and recycling of cooking fat

WHAT WE CAN DO AS INDIVIDUAL HOUSEHOLDERS



1. Install a water garden and soakaway in your garden

2. Install a water meter to save money and water.

3.  Save water in the toilets by putting a "hippopotamus" in the cistern that reduces the amount of water in one flush. 

Also, 
"If it's yellow, let it mellow.
If it's brown, flush it down"

4. Fit as many water butts as you can afford to save water for the garden in summer. But manage them properly: when they are full, and we are in a dry spell, let them run dry slowly so that they can store some of the water that falls on your roof.

5. Consider storing rainwater in tanks and pumping it to a separate system to flush the toilet

6.  Consider installing a composting toilet



THE PRIVATISATION FAILURE



Only two countries in the world have a fully privatised water system - the UK and Chile.

All the other 192-odd countries of the world, the water supply is treated as a national asset, though Public Private Partnerships are common.


Paying for Water

Ofwat in December 2024 allowed water companies (WCs) to raise water bills by about 35% to pay for work in separating stormwater from sewage. It is very clear indeed that it is absurd to expect that water and sewage bill payers could or should pay for all the necessary work which is needed to rationalise water management in the UK. Water bills are there to pay for water services provided by water companies, not to pay for those companies to pay for bonuses and dividends.


We are talking here about a massive infrastructure operation on a par with President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal in 1933, when he created employment to meet the economic suffering caused by the Great Depression of 1929-39.


The money for reform must be raised by central government to address a crisis of water management that adversely impacts the health of both humans and our aquatic environment, a long crisis that has been created by years of neglect and complacency, to be compounded in coming decades by the effects of climate change. There is a clear need for Keynesian-style investment into this vital element of our national life.


Neo-liberal economists and politicians (be they Tory, LibDem, or Labour) will use their influence in the legacy and social media to scream long and loud in protest at this suggestion, because to them, money is the only reality worth considering.


Neo-liberalism is the exceedingly questionable idea that self serving (largely) men, competing against each other for ever-increasing accumulations of monetary wealth, without any external restraint or regulation, will produce the best of all possible worlds. Ecological and human health to net-liberalists is a mere “externality” to economics. They have no concept of investment in human health or in ecology, they only think of investment in strictly financial terms. They cannot understand that investment can change a “waste” into value, or that healthy rivers, streams and oceans have value also.


The neoliberal hysteria will be amplified by a campaign by manufacturers of artificial fertilisers against the use of sewage derived soil conditioners, as mentioned above.


This is a battle that we must be prepared to fight and win, because it is the opening battle of an ideological war between neo-liberalism and real, ecological economics of the coming century, an economics which is based on the relation between mankind and the environment that is our life-support system.


The money needed to reform the way water is managed in the UK can be raised by a combination of:terminating the experiment of privatisation
a tax on the richest layers of British society
a contribution from Quantitative Easing




De-privatisation

Responsibility for water was taken from local government in 1974 and put under regional water authorities (RWAs). Investment in water services fell by 2/3rds between 1970 and 1980 because borrowing was forbidden under the Conservatives in power at the time. Margaret Thatcher privatised the RWAs in 1989, and allowed the private companies to borrow, so investment in infrastructure increased after privatisation. The debt owed by the RWAs was cancelled in order to facilitate privatisation. Debt has increased from zero in 1989 to £60.6 billion by 2022, so that a proportion of water bills (19% in the case of Wessex Water) is diverted to paying interest on the corporations’ debt.




Privatisation means that the WCs must pay dividends annually to their shareholders. In 2022-3 the companies paid out £1.4 billion in dividends to shareholders, nearly 11% of the companies’ total revenues, or 22% of capital investment.




In other words, without privatisation, about 22% more could have been applied to preventing sewage spillages into our environment.




The public are overwhelmingly against water privatisation. A YouGov poll in 2022 showed that only 8% of people supported privatised water, whereas 63% wanted public ownership. Even of Conservative voters, 58% wanted public ownership, with only 12% supporting the privatised system. Sadly, the Conservative, LibDem and Labour parties lack the courage to start to unpick Thatcher’s toxic legacy, and only the Green Party is calling for de-privatisation of the WCs.




Privatisation need not come at a huge cost. The share value of failing companies can fall away to nothing, so the Government can easily take them over when this happens. Thames Water is near this point in 2024. A water bill strike could bring other companies to that point.




An inventive way of de-privatisation of WCs is by punishing spillages, not by imposing fines, but by acquiring company shares instead. Directors could see power slip out of their hands every time another spillage happens. There is a petition calling for this method here: https://weownit.org.uk/act-now/take-shares-not-fines




Privatised WCs are clearly failing, and re-nationalisation or WCs will signal the beginning of the end of the doctrine of neo-liberalism, which has to be cleared away before we can address the global cluster of major social and environmental problems that we face in our time.




A tax on the rich

Households in the bottom decile (tenth) in the United Kingdom earned, on average, £18,706 per year in 2022/23, compared with the top decile which earned £185,358 pounds per year.


The richest 1% of British people hold more wealth than 70% of ordinary British people

Profs Wilkinson and Pickett have shown very clearly that such inequality of income and wealth creates a society that is less healthy, more unhappy, and more dysfunctional than a society that is more equal.


Therefore, the case for raising money from the rich for renovating our water infrastructure is very strong indeed.


The counter-argument that will be raised is that if we raise taxes in the UK, rich people will move abroad. However, rich people tend to hold assets like land and grand houses in the UK, and these assets cannot be moved. These assets can always be taxed, and money can be raised on them.


Additionally, Britain is a regrettably backwards and conservative country; other countries are more progressive, so there will be an international movement to tax the rich, leaving the rich with nowhere to go and nothing to do except pay their fair share of taxation.


AN INTRODUCTION TO THE PROBLEM OF POLLUTION FROM ANIMAL WASTE

About 75% of water pollution problems come from animal waste, and 25% from human sewage. The nutrients in the slurry consume the oxygen in the water of streams and rivers, and this can cause fish kills. Nutrients can also cause blooms - sudden overgrowth - of algae, which can poison fish.


Animal waste - the excrement that comes from cattle when they are penned up at night -  is collected in slurry pits, which are dangerous to life, since they produce gases that can displace oxygen. Farm workers die in slurry pits.

The solution is to capture these gases, purify them, and use them to power tractors and farm machinery.

Here is the website of a Cornish producer who does just that: https://bennamann.com/

Anaerobic bacteria - those that operate in the absence of oxygen - convert the slurry into soil conditioner -  a kind of fertiliser - and biogas, a mixture of carbon monoxide, methane and CO2, which can be processed and used in the farm tractor.

This beneficial technology prevents rain from causing open slurry pits to overspill and flow into streams and rivers. 



AN OVERVIEW OF THE PROBLEM OF HUMAN SEWAGE POLLUTION

SOLVING THE WATER AND SEWAGE CRISIS
Introduction

Water is an absolute necessity for human life, along with food, shelter, energy and effective waste recycling, yet water management is failing badly in the UK at present. Every time it rains heavily, there is a risk of discharge of untreated sewage into streams and rivers with consequent ecological damage and risk to human health, due to the combination of surface water and sewage. 
The management of our water infrastructure must be completely restructured and modernised, to separate sewage from surface water and industrial waste.
This paper aims to provide an overview of the whole field so that we can maintain our orientation and not become lost in a maze of competing technical details.

These are the factors affecting our water and sewage:

Climate change
Our planet’s climate is changing due to the burning of coal, oil and gas and other human activities. Surface temperatures are rising, and warm air can hold about 7% more moisture for every degree Centigrade of warming, which will mean more frequent and more intense precipitation of rain, and therefore more frequent and more intense floods. Warming also means that droughts may become more frequent in some parts of the country. In the longer term, sea level rise will threaten coastal flooding. Observations recorded by the Meteorological Office confirm that our climate is becoming wetter: “UK winters for the most recent decade (2014–2023) have been 9% wetter than 1991–2020 and 24% wetter than 1961–1990, with smaller increases in summer and autumn and none in spring”.

These changes are imposing stresses on our water systems, and the stresses will become more intense in coming years.

To avoid increasing episodes of flooding, we must therefore:

1.1 Plant trees on the tops of hills - Which greatly slows down the rate of water coming from the hills
1.2 Provide fields that can be deliberately flooded (polders) in the event of heavy rainfall
1.3 Provide flood protection for settlements vulnerable to flooding
1.4 Abandon some settlements that cannot be protected
1.5 Engineer some bottlenecks e.g. bridges, with flumes and other technologies
1.6 Dredge some river channels
1.7 Protect some estuaries with tidal barrages
1.8 Ensure that the rainwater run-off from all new build housing and hard surfacing is unable to get in to the sewers, and is used or returned to the environment as close as possible to the place that it falls.

Sewage
We are poisoning the environment by throwing away a substance that has value as a fertiliser and an energy source. Human excrement is a valuable resource when properly treated, but an ecocidal agent if released into water ways in its raw state. Proper treatment of sewage entails keeping it strictly separated from surface water running off from things like roofs and roads, and strictly separated from industrial waste.

We therefore need to
2.1 Create many new channels for surface water to run back to waterways without mixing with sewage.
2.2 Treat sewage (uncontaminated by industrial waste) by anaerobic digestion to produce valuable soil conditioner and biogas that can be fed into the gas grid.
2.4 Enable sewage to be recycled safely by identifying all forms of industrial and chemical waste, separate them from sewage, and find ways of managing them in a scientific way by combining them with other wastes, sometimes creating value for what was previously a waste industrial product.

3. Agricultural waste Slurry from cattle sheds often overflows into local ditches and streams, especially in times of heavy rainfall, just as happens with human sewage. Cattle and poultry effluents should therefore be digested to produce soil conditioner (fertiliser) and usable biogas. Inevitably, corporations that manufacture artificial fertiliser will work hard to prevent this outcome, and we must be prepared to meet all their push-back talking points.

This brief overview shows that there is a huge amount of work to be done, which will require a serious amount of money that cannot be generated by just putting up water bills.



See Paying for water services